Significance of Amavasya
Significance of Amavasya
Amavasya means no moon day or new moon day.
Whenever something or somebody becomes absent, through that absence, their
presence always becomes more powerful. If we had a friend or a loved one who
was with us, we never felt their presence so much. But the moment they
disappear, we feel their presence so much – it is so powerful, isn’t it? Even
on the emotional level, it is true. We do not really feel their presence when
they are around. Only when they are gone, the vacuum that they have left behind
has become more powerful than their presence itself. Similarly with the moon,
her absence makes her more present than ever before. On any other day, even the
Purnima, she is there, but on Amavasya, the presence is felt even more – that
quality is even more.
The earth broods on Amavasya; the life process is
slowed down on the planet and it is a great opportunity because the integration
of life happens much better on this day. When a certain slowdown happens, that
is when we notice our body. When everything is going well and we are busy, we
do not know what is happening with the body; the body is just us. But if a
little ailment comes, suddenly the body is an issue and it is something that we
have to pay attention to. Only when it does not do well, we know, ‘This is not
me. This is just my body giving me troubles.’ Very clearly a distance arises.
So, that is the significance of Amavasya. On that
day, because a certain integration of the elements is happening, there is a
slowdown of everything. If we are seeking wellbeing, Purnima is sacred. If we
are seeking liberation, Amavasya is sacred. Accordingly, there are different
kinds of spiritual practices for those two dimensions of life. It is a day
when one can become easily aware of, ‘What is me and what is not me,’ and from
there on, the journey from untruth to truth begins. From Amavasya to Purnima,
every month the opportunity is created naturally. Even for those who are
completely unaware, there is a natural opportunity available beginning every
Amavasya and moving on.
The nature of Purnima is more of the Ida or the
feminine. Amavasya is very raw. One day before Amavasya is known as Shivaratri
because it is Shiva’s night. It is primordial in nature. When everything is
pitch dark, it is like the creation is dissolved. There is a tinge of the
destroyer in Amavasya. Generally, on the night of Amavasya a very feminine
energy would either be disturbed because it causes certain fear and disturbance
in her, or it could turn roguish and man-like.
If a person is seeking wellbeing, man can also
make use of Purnima, but if he is seeking liberation or dissolution, Amavasya
is better. For all those who are seeking absolute dissolution, Amavasya is
great. The gravitational impact of the moon is working on our planet. So,
it is pulling everything up. Whole oceans are trying to rise. Similarly, our
own blood is trying to rise to the moon’s gravitation.
Whatever is our quality, it gets a little enhanced
on those days because the blood is being pulled upward. So, the whole energy is
being pulled upward in some way. For a spiritual sadhak who is always using every
means possible to move his energies upward, these two days are like a boon from
nature.
Comments
That's why many higher sadhanas are performed during these 2 days